No Script

Please Wait...

Leader of Martyrs: Sayyed Nasrallah

 

US Firm Receives $10 Mln to Help Whitewash Saudi Image

US Firm Receives $10 Mln to Help Whitewash Saudi Image
folder_openSaudi Arabia access_timeone year ago
starAdd to favorites

By Staff, Agencies

A US public relations firm has reportedly received some $10 million for helping Saudi Arabia clean up its bloody image.

Richard Edelman, CEO of the $1 billion firm Edelman, signed deals with the kingdom over the past four years to sanitize its image despite being a leading campaigner against doing business with autocratic regimes, according to the Guardian.

The Guardian report contrasted Edelman's public image as a global campaigner against autocrats and the services he had provided to Saudi Arabia. Edelman did not reply to questions asked by the British daily about the alleged hypocrisy of his firm.

Writing in June a blogpost about the key geopolitical issue of our time, Edelman said that he was "more convinced than ever" that the global rift between democracy and autocracy is the defining issue and that around the world, "autocracy is making gains against democracy."

Edelman's image as a crusader against business with autocrats was further enhanced earlier this year during the gathering of the World Economic Forum. He published a "special report" on the trust barometer focused on geopolitics. The company said that 59 percent of survey respondents agreed that "punish[ing] countries that violate human rights and international law" is a "business responsibility."

However, Edelman is failing to take his own advice because of his lucrative business ties to Saudi Arabia and with its Crown Prince Muhammed Bin Salman, according to the Guardian. Most of Edelman's work for the Riyadh has focused on rehabilitating its reputation in the US.

The work of the PR firm directed at American audiences is projected to net Edelman more than $5.6 million in fees. This included sending regular press releases that celebrate topics such as "mainstreaming women in business" and "doubling down efforts to empower women and youth." NEOM related projects are expected to earn Edelman more than $3 million.

The Guardian reported that on May 31, 2022, only days before Edelman published his blogpost warning of the growing divide between democracy and autocracy, he signed a $787,500 contract to provide the Saudi ministry of culture with "PR and communications services."

Several other US firms doing PR work to clean Saudi Arabia's image were also mentioned in the report including McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group, Hogan Lovells and Qorvis Communications.

Comments